MI'1SSI4NG SOM EING, see rageZ Y -.9 KrIA Dali 4; HOTTEST TEAM, WARMIERWEATHER Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVIII, No. 115 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MARCH 14, 1948 !Senate Gives OK to RP Bill in Late PRICE FIVE CENTS ession M'Mlermen Cop Big Nin Third Major Crown Falls To ichigan Wolverines Take Three Seconds By MURRAY GRANT IOWA CITY, Ia., March 13- Iowa and Ohio State set the rec- ords here in the 38th Western Conference championships, but it was the game and steady crew of Wolverine swimmers that had it when it counterl as they recap- tured the coveted title by ekeing out a 62-59 victory over defend- ing champs Ohio State. Taking only three first places in the 1,500 meter free style, the 150 yard backstroke and the 300 yard medley relay, the men of Mann were two deep in every event. It might have been Gil Evans two thirds in the diving or Matt Mann's outstanding work in the middle distances or any one of a number of stellar per- formances, but primarily it was a team victory, so characteristic of Michigan sports. In, all, 17 records were smashed, as each existing con- ference record went by the boards. Mann set a new ree- ord in the 1,500 meters, while all other tittists broke the old marks. Five National Intercol- legiate marks were shattered as those in the 250, 220, and 400 yard relays went along with the medley relay and breast-stroke records. To complete matters the Big Nine tanksters smashed four American amateur records for the long course, as standards in the 100 yard free style, breaststroke, medley and free style relays were erased from the books. Iowa won the 440 yard free style relay, but Michigan won the championship as they took third behind Ohio State. That was all they needed as the 5 point lead they held was increased by two points. Michigan's quartet . of Tittle, Kogen, Holiday and Wein- berg swam for that third slot as the amazing Iowa group of Duane Draves, Ken Marsh, Erv Straub and Ris really turned on the heat for a clocking of 3:33.4, to finish the string of broken records. Purdue was fourth and Wis- consin fifth, but the major point was that Michigan has re- gained the crown it lost two years ago and now points to- ward the NCAA crown in two t weeks, Ohio State's power came to the fore in the high board diving as the Buckeyes qualified four men for the finals:. Miller Anderson, Bruce Harlan, Hobic Billingsley and Jack Calhoun. Gil Evans was Michigan's lone finalist, but the rugged towhead copped a valuable third place behind Anderson and See OPPONENTS, Page 7 Inii ate Weldks Out on Jailers Sheriff John L. Osborn sounded a general alarm yesterday for the recapture of John H. Cribley, 20 years old, who "just walked out of the Washtenaw County Jail." The prisoner was released to the custody of the Washtenaw County Court House janitor yesterday morning to work during the day- but through a misunderstanding, 30 minutes before the janitors s arrival. Apparently he decided not to spend the day as assistant to the janitor and quietly slipped out of the Sheriff's offices, according to Osborn. Cribley was arrested on a simple larceny charge in Miltan and sen- tenced to serve 30 days in the county jail by Ypsilanti Justice of the Peace Mark J. Rust, on Feb. 19. Impressions of Palestine Revealed By AL BLUMROSEN Impressions of deserts, moun- tains, friendly and unfriendly Arabs, British stalling, and a memory of the "tremendous spirit' of the Palestinian Jews" were brought back to Ann Arbor re- cently when Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Ingber returned from an eleven weeks stay in the Holy Land. The Ingbers vividly remember the 24 hour celebration in Tel Aviv after the UN approved par- tition. The next day, all Jewish men between 17 and 25 were called into the Jewish Agency's military force, the Hagana. "There were no draft dodgers in Palestine," Ingber said. The Arabs who live within Pal- estine, the "inside Arabs" were friendly to the Jews before par- tition. Ingber said that all the trouble came from the "outside Arabs," those living across the borders of Palestine. Ingber, who traveled consider- ably in the strife-torn country, told of picking up a Palestinian Arab between Tel Aviv and Haifa1 who said that he was grateful to the Jews for giving him a chance for an education. Ingber remem- bered seeing thousands of Arabs sleeping on the ground in the open, "It was the kind of life they were used to," he said. On this same trip, which Ing- ber took in an armored car, an open bus followed them by twenty minutes. It was ambushed by the Arabs, Ingber said, and twenty people were killed. On Christmas, 1947, in Haifa. Ingber tried to get his baggage' from the port. As he got off the bus, he saw guns firing all around him and realized that he was in the midst of a battle. A 'passing British armored car picked him up when the soldiers found that he was an American and took him to the port. He saw British mo- bile forces leaving for the scene of the fight. It was over vhen they arrived. "The British could have had peace in Palestine if they had! wanted it," Ingber said. Mrs. Ingber said that the Brit- ish soldiers were very cautious about going around in cities. The British usually minimize the number killed in the day to day fighting, Ingber said, "The H1agana operates a secret radio which tells the truth to the pe- -pie." The Ingbers believed that t h e British will stay in Palestine e Ger the May 15 deadline. "If they leave, the "outside" Arabs will invade the country and the fight : ill go on." The most vivid memory brouht back by the couple was that of the spirit of the Palestinian Jews. The people who make up the Ha- gana are mostly local residents, although ablebodied refugees join, Ingber said. Hagana members told him that they could have been happy in Palestine without more refugees, but that they will fight on. Ingber said that the Hagna was a tremendous organization, See PALESTINE, Page 2 BY SIMPLE ALGEBRA: 'U' dentist Claims Previous Discovery of Uranus Satellite By FRAN IVICK University astronomer Lyle Lan- gdon yesterday called the new Uranus satellite, discovered four days ago, "small fish," which he located by mathematic formulae eight years ago, and asserted that more still important satellites of Venus and' Mars exist, waiting to be discovered. Langdon has tried for the past eight years to convince astrono- mers of the existence of Uranus, Venus and Mars satellites. "These astronomers can't find the satel- lites simply because they don't look for them," Langdon declared. Knows Satellite Diameter "To prove that my predictions are accurate, I can tell Kuyler, who discovered the Uranus satel- lite, just what its diameter is- 400 miles. I can further disclose the distance and weight of the un- discovered Venus and Mars satel- lites," Langdon asserted. Langdon, whose astronomical as- sertions have been pooh-pooed by publishers, says that he is glad Psyeholo oists Argrue Claims By' Bariisters Caustic criticism by Detroit judges of the accuracy of the Re- corder's Court Psychiatric Clinic met with strong argument from University psychologists. One of the judges claimed that hie himself would probably be la- beled unstable if he were studied by the clinic. He claimed that the reports "all say that the patient is unreliable, immature, unsteady or unstable, and suffering from emotional conflicts." Because of this, the judge, John J. Maher, tore up the report, say- ing it was "no help" in deciding the case. In defense of the psychiatric clinic, University psychology Prof. Louis Granich said that the fre- quent reports of "unstable" on the criminals might easily be true. "The majority of criminals are not mentally ill, but everyone has some trouble or unhappiness which might result in his coming before the court," Granich said. "The clinic's job is to look for these minor personality difficul- ties, in an attempt to explain his criminality." E. L. Walker, psychology in- structor, agreed with Prof. Gran- ich, adding that "most cases that .nnn h~fnrPa n.4, ,rls anra imnp1'nhla someone finally saw the Uranusl satellite, so that his first predic- tions will be proved, and his later ones respected and investigated. More Research, Not Credit "I'm not trying to take credit for the discovering of the Uranus satellite at this point," Langdon See SATELLITES, Page 3 World News At aGlance By The Associated Press ANCHORAGE, Alaska, March 13-A search plane reported today that it had sighted a smashed Shanghai-to-St. Paul airliner, which vanished last night with 30 persons aboard, on an Alaska mountainside. JERiUSALEM!', Matrcl A series of violent explosions roked Jerusalem tonight and heavy fighting was reported in the Jaffa-Tel Aviv area. WASHINGTON, March 13--1') --Secretary of Agriculture Ander- son decided today to run for the Senate and President Truman thereby lost a political asset from his Cabinet. WASHINGTON, March 13 - Four members of the Southern Governors Conference recom- mended today that the south "fight to the last ditch" to prevent the renomination of President Truman." Winners Anntounced Criticism paid off to five Daily readers, whose prize-win- ning "If I Were Editor" con- tributions netted them a radio and $25 in prizes. First prize, which included the radio and $5, went to the wife of a graduate student, Mrs. Rupert G, Otto, of 1443 University Terrace. Her letter, with the other prize criticisms, appears on page 2. Four other prizes, of $5 each, go to Humphrey A. Olsen, 530 Hill, George R. Zuckerman, 100£3 Milroe; Stanley G. Har- ris, 17 Veteran's Housing Pro- ject; Keith McKean, 1320 Wile Court, Willow Run. Prizes will be awarded at 4 p.m. tomorrow at the Student Publications Building. The five letters represent a fair sample of what were re- ceived, and were chosen as the most constructive and readable of those letters. (ouceciralionrTaks 't' End Thi ' Week The final week of departmental concentration talks will open to- morrow with a discussion by Prof. B. W. Wheeler of history and so- cial studies as fields of concen.- 0rution and as preparaUon for teaching. The history meeting will be held at 4:15 p.m., Rm. 231, A.H. Other meetings to be held this week include philosophy and the degree program in religion and ethics, 4:15 'j.n. tomorrow. Rm. ._Tite 'U'Residence Food Critics odOutline Plans Officals Are till Silett on issue BY RUSS CLANAhIAN and KEN LOWE The attack on the University's "food situation" gained momen- tum yesterday with the appoint- nient of a West Quadrangle food committee to work in cooperation with the East Quad group. Simultaneously, representatives from all eight East Quad houses met for the first time to launch a concerted drive to improve eating conditions there. It was also learned that a simi- lar organization has been pro- posed for Mosher-Jordan dormi- tory. The Daily was enable to deter- mine University reaction to these developments as officials main- tained silence on the situation. Committee Members Appointments to the new men's food committee were made by Eu- gene F. Lamb, president of the West Quad Council. Retracting his statement in Friday's Daily on the "improved" West Quad food con- ditions, Lamb said, "I have since found out that there is a great feeling against the food here." Committee members appointed by Lamb were Ken Daly, of Allen- Rumsey House. Chairman; Wil- liam Krauss, Wenley House; Ed Irion, Lloyd House; and Duane Neuchterlein, Williams House. The East Quad meeting resulted in the establishment of a new eight-man committee, consisting of one representative from each house and headed by Jerry Ryan, of Tyler House. Formerly, only four East Quad houses were repre- sented. Complaints Drawn i>p An outline cf all complaints against the food situation was drawn up and scheduled for sub- mission in a report Monday to Mts. Eleauor H. Korstad, East Quad dietician. The report will also include petitions signi by i'csients of the eight houses and i list of suggestions for improve- mnen t. Mosheir-Jordan plans are still in the formative stage but initial ac- tion is expected early this week. Meanwhile, West Quad resent- ments against services there cen- tered around methods of food preparation and the "inefficiency" in the dormitory kitchen. Tcmporary Improvement "It is true that the food in West Quad did improve for a short time but it has since become apparent that it was not a permanent change," Lyman H. Legters, Jr., of Wenley House, said. And he added: "It was merely a tactical move designed to quiet student By CRAIG WILSON The local rent control system is just a "smokescreen," according to Washtenaw County rent con- trol officials, Local boards have accomplished nothing for all the time they have spent, under the present rent con- trol law," Wilson White, chair- man of the Washtenaw County Rent Control Board, commented yesterday on Congressional plans to revamp the old law. "At present there is no author- ity delegated to local boards. All we do is make recommendations which are subject to the inter- pretation of higher authorities not on the local scene," White said. House Amendment An amendment written into the new rent control law approved by the senate, by the House Bank- ing Committee, would give local boards power to decontrol rents entirely in their areas or to order increases, thle Associated Press reports. The main purpose of the new law is to extend modified controls to March 31, 1949. Chairman White said he ex- pects the law will be passed and hoped that it would provide means for rent control enforcement on the local level, where an "on-'he- scene" review can be made' "Hole in Control" Rep. Monroney (Dem., Okla.) commented that the House-pro- posed amendment would "knock an awful hole in effective rent control." He will attempt to restore a Senate provision that requires the local boards to recommend rent increases or complete decontrol but leaves it up to the Federal Housing Administrator to decide whether they have "substantiat- ed" their cases, the Associated Press said. White commented that "sub- stantiation" has not been done in the extent Congress originally in- tended. He explained that the Federal Housing Expediter had been recently taken to task for deciding that "substantiation" had been made in 300 hundred cases asking for maintenance of present controls and reversing his position when local boards asked changes in the status quo. .Local Groups To Plan Czech ProtestRally A full program for mobilizing campus sentiment against abride- ments of academic freedom in Czechoslovakia will be drawn up tomorrow when individual stu- dents and delegates of campus or- ganizations gather at 4:15 p.m. in the Union far a planning confer- ence. The local Council for Academic Freedom, the IFC and the Inter- Guild were yesterday added to the roster of groups that will partici- pate. And late last night, it ap- peared that a muster taken at the meeting will find most of the Uni- versity's political and semi-politi- cal clubs on hand. Loud Condemnation Some groups on campus were loud in their condemnation of the Czech coup, and gave full sanction to the plans for a protest rally. But participation in the meeting did not commit a group to support any stand taken, some leaders were quick to point out. Harry Blackwell, chairman of the United World Federalists, de- clared that his organization would back the meeting to the hilt. "The battle for academic free- dom is world wide," he said. "It takes precedence over any particu- lar program of any particular group." IRA Await: Information Thi RA's Executive Board, however, has oted to table a defi- nite stand on the Czech coup until more information is available. But a delegate will be on hand and will report back to the memebership on Thursday. And the local NSA chapter. agreed that more information should be presented before a defi- nite commitment is made. The chapter wrote its parent body urging it to suspend cancel- STUDENT VETERANS PROTEST MACARTHUR-John Carr (right), a veteran of Pacific action and a student at Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology speaks to students at a rally in Boston, Mass., organized by a newly-formed group, Veterans Against MacArthur, in opposition to the General's nomination for the Presidency. The rally was held in front of one of the buildings of Boston University, where the group claims active members, as well as at Harvard. 'SMOKESCREEN'. Chairman Says Local Rent BoardsAccomplish Nothing Five Billions In Aid Given To16Nations F'inal Vote Ends 1 Hour Debate By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 13 -- A history-making $5,300,000,000 Eu- ropean aid program won approval by the United States Senate to- night. The vote was announced at 69 to 17. The action which sent the measure to the House came at a dramatic night session after more than 11 hours of debate. Advocates of the program de- Glared it offers the best chance of saving 16 Western European na- tions from Communism and eco- nomic collapse. Opponents attacked the meas- ure as a costly outlay which might undermine the American economy and permit Russia to shove its iron curtain to the shores of the Atlantic. With galleries packed to capac- ity, a score of Senators took the floor to praise or condemn the 52- month program for helping friendly nations help themselves. The vote marked the first ap- proval by either house of the plan outlined by Secretary of State Marshall in a Harvard commence- ment speech last June 5. The .measure, which author- izes funds for the first year's operation from April 1, faces new assaults in the House. Pas- sage there Is expected, but strong efforts may be made to reduce the dollar outlay and to add other foreign aid funds to the bill. The actual appropriation bills are yet to come. The authorization measure left the Senate without substantial change from the form in which it was introduced by Chairman Ven- denberg (Rep., Mich.) of the Sen- ate Foreign Relations Committee, and Senator Connally (Dem., Tex.) the ranking Democratic member of that committee. Time after time Vandenberg took the floor to call for the re- jaction of amendments which would have effected major changes in the bill. On each oc- casion he mustered sufficient votes from both sides of the aisle to win handily. The bill faced its biggest test Friday night when Senator Taft (Rep., Ohio) offered an amend- ment to reduce the 12-month au- thorization to $4,000,000,000. It was defeated 56 to 31. Vandenberg steered the bill over two more formidable hurdles Sat- urday. Czech Envoy To UN Fre LAKE SUCCESS, March 13-(QP) -The Prague government today fired Dr. Jan Papanek as Czech- oslovak delegate to the United Na- tions, but Papanek defied the Communist-dominated regime he has bitterly attacked. Ending a three-day official si- lence, the Prague authorities sent through their Washington office to the UN a curt telegram saying Papanek had ceased to be the permanent delegate on the Czech- oslovak Republic on March 10. That was the day on which Papanek attacked the Communist government in Prague, accused Russia of aiding the Communists to gain control, and demanded that the UN Security Council in- vestigate the coup. Papanek acted without inform- ing Prague what he planned to do. As soon as the UN received the dismissal notice, Papanek told this repor'ter by telephone that ".I am going on in my position." He said he would bow only to a written recall signed personally by Pres- ident Benes. 321, A.H. complaints." Survey Reporters Strive on as Reader Contradicts Reading *a*bits This week The Daily's Roundup Reporters have taken a survey of University student's reading habits. We are happy to report that The Michigan Daily topped the list with a whopping 85 per cent of the students contacted reporting that they read The Daily regularly. Next in order came Time Magazi c with 65 per cent and Life Maga' inc with 62 per cent. This week the Roundup Reporters varied their survey technique which came under fire from critics doubting the validity of the first two polls on UMT and presidential choices. Reading tastes were polled by selecting two names from specified pages of the Student' Directory and contacting the person by phone. A total of 756 students were contacted. After The Daily, Time and Life, the Detroit newspapers came in for the biggest share of readers. Forty one per cent of the students contacted read the Detroit Free Press while the News netted 20 per cent of those contacted and the Times garnered 11 per cent. News- nonr r~ n a .0hin n, w n- n . inrhfnr. h A- nnn .Arhnr,. Nnu,' ran V;Mrf 1441Results (EDITOR'S NOTE: Last week's Daily poll on l'MT seems to have aroused a storm of controversy. Daily Night Editor slipped up in one respect and lit misleading headline get by, for which she has been censured. Reader Warren, a law school junior, disbelieves Daily poll results and has sent along his own icdings which differ from our survey.) By JACK W. WAR-E N (I aily Volun1tary contribu tor) $omcwhat irked at arecent headline in 1hew Daily stating that the student body was opposed to universal military training, and feeling that The Daily poll didn't give a true cross-section of campus opinion, I conducted my own poll Friday. Stationed in front of the Union and the main library, 1 inter- viewed 363 students on the following questions: (1) Are you a student at the University of Michigan? (2) Are you over or under 20 years of age? (3) Do you favor a system of universal military training in the United States? The results of my poll differed considerably from those of The Daily noll